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NewsApril 9, 2015

NEW ORLEANS -- Millionaire real estate heir Robert Durst was indicted Wednesday on the two weapons charges that have kept him in New Orleans even though his lawyers say he wants to go to Los Angeles as soon as possible to face a murder charge there...

By JANET McCONNAUGHEY and KEVIN McGILL ~ Associated Press
Robert Durst is transported from Orleans Parish Criminal District Court to the Orleans Parish Prison after his arraignment in March in New Orleans. (Gerald Herbert ~ Associated Press file)
Robert Durst is transported from Orleans Parish Criminal District Court to the Orleans Parish Prison after his arraignment in March in New Orleans. (Gerald Herbert ~ Associated Press file)

NEW ORLEANS -- Millionaire real estate heir Robert Durst was indicted Wednesday on the two weapons charges that have kept him in New Orleans even though his lawyers say he wants to go to Los Angeles as soon as possible to face a murder charge there.

Durst, the son of a wealthy New York real estate family, has had multiple run-ins with the law over his nearly 72 years. He was arrested in New Orleans on the eve of the finale of a six-part HBO documentary called "The Jinx" about his ties to two deaths and the disappearance of his first wife in 1982.

A grand jury charged Durst with possession of a firearm by a felon and with possession of both a firearm and an illegal drug: 5 ounces of marijuana, said Assistant District Attorney Chris Bowman, spokesman for the district attorney.

His arraignment was scheduled for today before Criminal District Judge Franz Zibilich.

The indictment listed 15 aliases -- two variations of his name, and others including Dorthy Ciner, the name Durst was living under while posing as a deaf mute in Texas, and Morris Black, the 71-year-old neighbor he killed and dismembered there, winning acquittal on a murder charge by arguing self-defense. Also listed was Everette Ward, the name under which he registered at the J.W. Marriott in New Orleans, according to court testimony.

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Durst's attorneys did not respond to requests for comment. They have said the weapons arrest was illegal, partly because FBI agents searched Durst's hotel room before his arrest and without a search warrant.

The weapons arrest has kept Durst in New Orleans even though he has waived extradition to Los Angeles, where he's charged in the December 2000 death of his longtime friend Susan Berman. Attorney Billy Gibbens told Magistrate Harry Cantrell on Tuesday that Durst would be willing to pay the transportation costs to get him to California.

Until his indictment Wednesday, Durst had been arrested but not formally charged in connection with the .38-caliber revolver authorities say was found in his room at the J.W. Marriott, where he was staying under an assumed name.

According to court testimony, an FBI agent recognized Durst in a New Orleans hotel March 14 and escorted him to his hotel room. Durst was arrested early March 15 on the Los Angeles warrant and arrested separately on the weapons charges the next day.

Durst's lawyers say the arrest in New Orleans was timed to coincide with the final episode of "The Jinx," which also described the disappearance of his wife, Kathleen, in 1982 from New York; the Los Angeles shooting of Berman, 55, in 2000; and Black's death in 2001.

Durst, who will turn 72 Sunday, was in court Tuesday, hands shackled in padded cuffs. A deputy had to help him out of his armchair.

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